Ambulance 2. Parked in front of the Beach Hotel and Orient House, then backed down to the Avenue Restaurant and Coffee Shop, where it waited until the bodies of the three other boys were produced. Moved forward and stopped on the street in front of the sandy incline to the beach. Here it collected the wounded Salafist bomber and the dead boy in the green shirt.

Ambulance 3. Parked across the street from the Avenue Restaurant and Coffee Shop, waiting along with Ambulance 2. When word was received that the three bodies had been produced, Ambulance 3 went to the al Deira Hotel to pick up Hamad Bakr and Muntaser Bakr.

Ambulance 4. Arrived as the wounded man was being loaded into Ambuance 3. After the paramedics ran to the beach to collect the final two corpses, someone moved the ambulance to the sandy incline between the Avenue Restaurant and Coffee Shop and the al-Andalus Wedding Hall and Restaurant. The two dead boys were loaded; Ambulance 4 then drove to the al-Deira Hotel and joined Ambulance 3. Both sped off to al-Shifa Hospital.

Much of the information is in this video, which has been edited to confuse the sequence of events.

First ambulance arrives at 2:21. Hamas commander in the purple shirt shows it where to park.

TV truck drives to breakwater at 2:41.

Huge crowd of reporters and Hamas operatives at 3:09.

Hamas commander in tan shirt at 3:35.

Hamas commander in purple shirt at 3:36.

Second ambulance arrives, parks in front of Beach Hotel and Orient House, 0:08. The paramedics run to the beach, turn around, and come back to the ambulance.

You can see that after the body of Ismail Bakr is taken away, almost all of the Western reporters leave the area.

Only Tyler Hicks of the New York Times remains.

Then the ambulance that was parked at the corner of the Avenue Restaurant and Coffee Shop races toward the empty lot between the Avenue Restaurant and Coffee Shop and the al-Andalus Wedding Hall and Restaurant, 0:11 in the Zain video.

Ehna TV: T he wounded man is put in the second ambulance with the body of Mohammed Bakr, 0:12-0:24.

The Hamas commander in the purple shirt and the second-in-command in the tan shirt get out of the ambulance and stand guard.

Soon after the wounded man from the beach is put in the second ambulance, the fourth ambulance arrives and parks across the street. Cameraman Mohamed Jabaly accompanies the paramedics who run to the beach.

The paramedics from the fourth ambulance collect the bodies of Ahed Bakr (red shirt) and Zakaria Bakr (gray shirt).

After the bodies of the two boys are loaded into the fourth ambulance, that vehicle drives to the al-Deira Hotel to join up with the third ambulance, which is carrying Muntaser Bakr and Hamad Bakr.

AFP prevents its videos from being embedded.

At 0:49, Muntaser has been put on the left, and Hamad on the right (bare foot).

At 0:52, the third ambulance (white flag) is followed by the fourth ambulance to al-Shifa Hospital.

The key is the Mohamed Jabaly video. It shows that the bodies of Ahed and Zakaria Bakr were collected before the ambulance carrying Mohammed Bakr had left. It also shows that the area around the breakwater was empty of journalists.

Journalists ran to the breakwater immediately after the first two explosions. Therefore the Mohamed Jabaly video and the MSNBC screen shot prove that the sequence of events was as follows:

1. Two explosions.
2. Journalists run to breakwater.
3. Ismail Bakr removed from steel container and taken away.
4. Journalists leave the beach.
5. Second ambulance arrives, parks in front of Beach Hotel and Orient House, then moves to corner of Avenue Restaurant and Coffee Shop.
6. Third ambulance arrives, parks across the street from second ambulance.
7. After the bodies of Mohammed, Ahed, and Zakaria Bakr are produced, the second ambulance moves forward to park in front of a vacant lot between the Avenue Restaurant and Coffee Shop and the al-Andalus Wedding Hall and Restaurant.
8. The third ambulance goes to the al-Deira Hotel to pick up Muntaser and Hamad Bakr.
9. The fourth ambulance—with Mohamed Jabaly on board—arrives and parks across the street from the second ambulance.
10. The bodies of Ahed and Zakaria Bakr are collected LAST, not first.
11. The fourth ambulance drives to the al-Deira Hotel, here it joins the third ambulance.
12. The third and fourth ambulance leave the al-Deira together, heading for al-Shifa Hospital.

News footage proves that three bodies were placed on the beach later.

In interview conducted by film crew sent to Gaza, Commodore Hotel worker Muhammed says that western reporters arrived on the scene within two minutes.

Alex Marquardt of ABC News immediately runs to the breakwater after the two explosions.

As he runs past the place in the sand where the three bodies will later be “found,” we can see that it’s empty, 0:12.

Stefanie Dekker of al-Jazera photographs the removal of Ismail Bakr’s body. The procession walks right past the area where the three other bodies will be found, 0:33.

At 0:38 Stephani Dekker says that the three other bodies were “found further up the beach.” In reality the bodies were found in the area of her photograph.

The Zain for Media Production Company video (above) shows reporters running to the breakwater past the place where the three bodies will later be found, 1:42.

The fake 24 Media Production Company photos

The steel container isn’t burning.

The photos show a projectile hitting the ground between the Avenue Restaurant and Coffe Shop and the al-Andalus Wedding Hall and Restaurant, but there was no crater in the sand.

I made a gif that shows how the base of the explosion moves from side to side, but the column of smoke doesn’t grow taller. Impossible.

There’s no crater anywhere between the Avenue Restaurant and Coffee Shop and the al-Andalus Wedding Hall and Restaurant.

The Hamas operations team

A man in a purple shirt is present everywhere, from the al-Deira Hotel to the breakwater.

Here he is supervising the removal of Mohammed al Watfah, who claimed to have been injured in the Avenue Restaurant and Coffee Shop and put in an ambulance there.

Channel 4 News, the Hamas commander holds the taxi door while Watfah is place inside, 0:17.

This man can be seen in every single scene from that day.

The Hamas commander showing the first ambulance where to park.

Running to the breakwater.

Watching as the paramedics remove the body of Ismail Bakr.

Following the paramedics to the first ambulance.

Shutting the doors of the first ambulance, joined by the second-in-command (tan shirt).

Accompanying the paramedics of the second ambulance as it leaves the corner of the Avenue Restaurant and Coffee Shop.

Sitting in the second ambulance with the body of Mohammed Bakr.

Supervising the removal of the bodies of Ahed and Zakaria Baker.

Second-in-command

The second in command in the tan shirt was just as busy. Here he is in the AFP video from above, at the al-Deira Hotel, observing Mohammed al Watfah’s performance.

Conflicting eyewitness accounts

“The kids were playing football on the beach. They were all under the age of 15… When the first shell hit the land, they ran away but another shell hit them all. It looked as if the shells were chasing them.”

Muhammad both heard and felt an explosion near the coffee shop. He ran outside to check on the children, only to see that they were running towards him in an attempt to escape. Muhammad recalls that the children looked terrified. One of the boys screamed at Muhammad to call an ambulance as his brother was wounded. Then another bomb hit the boys as they were running.

As the smoke of the bomb settled, Muhammad saw four of the boys’ bodies on the ground scattered and dismembered, while the surviving three boys hid behind a garbage can. Muhammad ran towards them and called for help. The coffee shop where Muhammad works was shelled as well. Muhammad saw his colleague, Fahd Abu Sultan, 23, lying on the floor drowned in blood. Moments later, many journalists were at the beach taking pictures of the children. An ambulance arrived and Muhammad helped carry the children. Muhammad then noticed that he too had been injured and was bleeding in the lower parts of his stomach. He was transferred to the hospital along with Fahd and the children.

“The first missiles were aimed straight at the container. I then saw four escaping and they got about 200 metres from the container and another shell targeted them directly. Because it was so far from the container, I was sure they had been directly targeted. I have experienced three different wars and this is the worst thing I have seen.”

“We witnessed the incident. The first strike occurred, and we went out onto our balcony. You have to understand that this happened right in front of the hotels on the Gaza beachfront where most of the international media are staying, so there were very many witnesses of this incident. As I mentioned, there was a first very loud strike that hit a structure that is right on the Gaza port. So, many people looking out onto there. And after that first strike happened, we saw four very young children running away from the point of impact on a completely empty beach, so very clearly visible from a distance. And that’s why—that’s when, excuse me, there was a second strike that obviously hit the other children, so leaving four children dead on that beach—a very shocking incident given that, again, these children were clearly simply playing around and were very, very clearly visible from a distance.”

5. Sharif Abdel Kouddous, Democracy Now (same source as above).

“Well, Amy, as you heard, these four young boys, aged between nine and 11, were playing on a pier just jutting out into the sea, right in front of the Deira Hotel, which houses many foreign correspondents. There were more than four; there were eight kids, actually, playing. And apparently a naval gunboat fired on them. One of them was killed, and the rest of the children began to run. I visited the site today. There’s a lot of rubble and twisted metal where the initial hit came. About 20 or 30 yards away from that, while the children were running, which seems to indicate that an adjustment was made to give a direct hit on these children, they were hit. I spoke to a witness, a fisherman who was right there, who said the kids were blown apart. One landed about 20 meters from the other two. They were all killed. Mohammed was 11 years old; Zakaria, nine; Ismail, 11; and Ahed was nine—all from the Bakr family. They’re all cousins.”

5. Tyler Hicks, New York Times (same source as above).

“And I just, you know, heard a loud explosion, a big crack right outside the window. I immediately looked outside, with my—my driver was here with me. And I could see just this part of the port, this jetty that goes out into the water, just outside my window, with a small structure, really just like a little shack, that had just been hit by a bomb. And at that time, I could just see one child running away from that into the open sand. I knew that there was a strong possibility that there would be injuries or even deaths because of this, and I quickly started to grab my cameras, my protective flak jacket, when another second explosion happened outside about 30 seconds after the first one. When I looked back out, that very boy that I had seen running was then lifeless, killed on the beach in the open, and along with three other boys who were playing with him.

“And it’s pretty hard—in my opinion, would be—to mistake grown men and, you know, Hamas militants, at that, for children no more than four feet high wearing beach clothes, scattering from this initial explosion. I mean, in my opinion, it would be pretty obvious, especially given the 30-second window between the first explosion and the second that killed three of the four. One was actually killed by that first bomb. But that 30 seconds should be enough to assess whether or not those are children or civilians or actual Hamas militants.

“The first projectile hit the sea wall of Gaza City’s little harbour just after four o’clock. As the smoke from the explosion thinned, four figures could be seen running, ragged silhouettes, legs pumping furiously along the wall. Even from a distance of 200 metres, it was obvious that three of them were children.

“Jumping off the harbour wall, they turned on to the beach, attempting to cross the short distance to the safety of the Al-Deira hotel, base for many of the journalists covering the Gaza conflict.

“They waved and shouted at the watching journalists as they passed a little collection of brightly coloured beach tents, used by bathers in peacetime.

“It was there that the second shell hit the beach, those firing apparently adjusting their fire to target the fleeing survivors. As it exploded, journalists standing by the terrace wall shouted: “They are only children.”

“Three others who were injured made it to the hotel: Hamad Bakr, aged 13, with shrapnel in his chest; his cousin Motasem, 11, injured in his head and legs, and Mohammad Abu Watfah, 21, who was hit by shrapnel in his stomach.”

“I had just returned to the hotel to type up some notes and file inserts on the day’s news when there was a large explosion on the quay at the port, a little after 4 o’ clock in the afternoon.

“We could smell the charge. I wondered: Did Hamas just fire a rocket? But it was the sound of an incoming round. We saw a small fisherman’s shack on the quay, churning with gray smoke.

“Then we saw a gang of kids running from the shack, down the breakwater and onto the sand, hurtling toward al-Deira. A couple of waiters, the cook and a few journalists started waving at them. Run here! Then a second strike landed right behind them.

“The staff were yelling, ‘They’re hurt!’

“A half-dozen kids made it to the hotel. A young man also reached safety and fainted. He was bleeding from the abdomen. He was scooped up and carried to a taxi by a big, friendly bear of a bellman, room cleaner and night watchman named Mahmoud Abu Zbaidah.”

Fahd Abu Sultan, a 25-year-old laborer, paid dearly for an act of courage on July 16. He rushed to help when an Israeli navy boat shelled a group of boys playing soccer on a Gaza beach, killing one and wounding others. As Sultan tried to carry away the wounded, the shelling resumed, killing three others.

Abu Sultan has five gaping shrapnel wounds. He lay on a sofa in his home while male nurses changed the dressing, causing him so much pain he had to pause as he described how the rocket hit only meters (yards) away from him.

“I kept on screaming to the ambulance people to come to rescue me but no one heard me,” he recalled. “I was the last one to be taken to hospital.”

“On July 16, I was filing a report in my hotel when the sound of a blast prompted me to run outside. I arrived on the hotel patio to see a group of children running in panic along the beach towards us. As they ran, another shell was fired at them. Several managed to take refuge in the hotel, where staff and journalists tried to comfort the terrified and treat the wounded. At least three were injured. With two other journalists, I tried to help a boy with shrapnel in his chest. Ambulances came and evacuated the wounded. They got to the beach to find four dead children.”

A witness who identified himself only as Abu Ahmed said the boys had been scavenging for scrap metal when the first shell hit a nearby shipping container used in the past by Hamas security forces. He said the boys fled but a second projectile “hit all of them”.

13. Abadallah (same source as above).

Abadallah said he saw “white smoke coming from a small room, like a shack” belonging to one of the fishermen not far from the fishing port. Then he saw the boys running.

“We started shouting at them: ‘Run, run here.’ Then a shell from the sea landed behind them,” Abadallah said. Some journalists dining at the hotel jumped from the terrace and helped five children bleeding from shrapnel get to safety in the hotel. “I will never forget these horrible images,” he said.

One boy killed by the first projectile, and three ran up the beach. The second shell hit the other boys while they were running, forty yards away from the initial strike. Ali Abu Hassera, a fisherman who was standing nearby, says the gunner must have adjusted his aim to target them. Three more were killed. They were thrown tens of yards apart by the force of the blast. When Abu Haseera and his colleagues ran towards the boys to help, another shell hit, wounding two of them.

“We had just come back to the Al Deira Hotel from reporting at a hospital and was about to edit our piece for Channel 4 when it happened.

“There had been a lot of heavy shellfire and outgoing rockets all day, and I was standing by the hotel window when there was the loudest, god-almighty explosion. I saw smoke rising from the beach and from a little hut.

“Within a minute, journalists were running out from the hotel and people were shouting and pouring out of buildings to help.

“Three children, struck by missiles while playing on the beach, were quickly carried onto the hotel terrace. They were covered in blood.

“One little boy had a serious chest wound — it looked like a shrapnel wound. His brother was lying very quietly on the floor; his head and upper body was covered in blood. Their other little brother was seemingly uninjured — he was just shaking and screaming in distress and shock.”

Mustafa Tamimi

Killed December 10, 2011.

Gallagher Fenwick, France 24

Fenwick said that as he stood on the balcony of his hotel, he saw four boys killed on the open beach (eyewitness account No. 4, above). However, in reality he was on the breakwater with the reporters who first arrived. He ran past the empty place in the sand where the bodies were later discovered, so he therefore saw that the three dead children were not there. Fenwick is seen in 0:14 to 0:17 in the video above.

Here’s France 24’s report on the incident. You can see that Fenwick is wearing the same black shirt and large blue flak jacket as above.

Entrance hole made by Israeli missile

Israeli air-to surface missiles have high-explosive antitank (HEAT) warheads. A small missile like the Mikholit would first penetrate the steel container and then explode inside.

There’s a hole in the side of the container that perfectly corresponds to the smoke cloud seen in the TF1 News video.

Also, if two men were going to fire a missile at a hotel, they would be in the open end of the container, right below the hole in the wall.